100,000 punters have signed up to BT's Wi-Fi love-in, sharing their home connectivity in exchange for having access to everyone else's, enabling the operator to call itself the world's largest Wi-Fi community.
Spot the hotspot
Previous attempts to get people to share their connectivity have fallen foul of usage restrictions, …

COMMENTS

Doooooomed

I love FON - in theory. I nearly signed up, but then realised I would be one of two users on the Isle of Wight, the other user being in a housing estate in Shanklin; not desperately where I'd want to hang out with my iPhone.

If FON had hotspots along beaches, in parks, in business estates, city centres, train stations etc., I'd jump at the chance. But the intrinsic flaw in it's business plan is that these are exactly the places that it doesn't have hotspots - as they're not residential.

I suppose BT Openzone is a start - but I'm not entirely convinced, as I'm meant to have free access to them as part of my O2 contract, but have yet to figure out how to achieve this - every time I've tried, it's insisted I log in, or sign up and pay. Hmm.

For the sake of science...

There's allegedly a hotspot in the next postcode along from me, so between 3 and 7 doors away or something like that. Thing is, the average age of those neighbours is about 80, so I kind of have my doubts... Still, I'll go stand at the end of their driveways anyway in the interests of research,

Public Information Films

Ok I put my hand up

It was me - i joined up a few days ago so I'm responsible for this mile stone :) Sorry but as i do live just next to the local shop and bus stop (if i reach over my back fence i can touch the bus stop) it may prove of use to some one...... may be.... some day...

59p so far...

From my FON router in an apartment block in Salford Quays, all from 15 minute free sessions (if you're reading this, hi!). On the other hand, my router at home has never and probably will never get a customer, as it overlooks a granny farm (not many surfin' grannies there) in a small rural town.

Fon is missing several tricks here: it should be selling itself into pubs and shops, rather than expecting businesses to volunteer. The router should act more like a grid or repeater to seamlessly share traffic on the move, and overall, it should be accessible. I can see that my home router is down from the FON website, but I can't get into it remotely to reset it. The Openzone service is, so far, a one way street for Fon users: we can use BTFon spots, which are generally in residential streets, and they can use our Fon spots, but we can't use Openzone, which is in towns. Fortunately my T-mobile wireless broadband account does... or will eventually. Maybe.

Doooooomed 2

"I suppose BT Openzone is a start - but I'm not entirely convinced, as I'm meant to have free access to them as part of my O2 contract, but have yet to figure out how to achieve this - every time I've tried, it's insisted I log in, or sign up and pay. Hmm."

Same here. Also said something on The Cloud's page about being able to use "The Cloud, BT Openzone, credEcard, Vonage, O2, Skype, Nintendo Wi-Fi Zone, Sprint, iPass, Divine Management", but this also didn't work, so not overly impressed.

BT FON Stealth Tactics

The only reason BT FON even has so many users is the way the deploy it.

My dad has it and didn't even know. Basically a guy from BT phoned him and said he could have a free wireless router upgrade and £1 a month off his broadband. My dad obviously thought it was a good deal as he didn't even have to extend his contract. It was only when I looked into it that I found the new router was automatically set up to use BT FON, something they never even bothered to tell him about.

Between that and Phorm I've lost all respect for BT. I used to always recommend them to friends and family for broadband, but not anymore!

@censored

The only way I would do this

You would need to beef up your wireless using a separate access point using modified firmware such as DD-WRT ( http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/What_is_DD-WRT%3F ) with FON Hotspot ( http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/FON_Hotspot ) if you wanted to stop people being resource hogs and having any element of control of your own connection.

Fon?

As a customer of BT Broadband I tried to set FON up, and failed. I then found from a forum that it was becoming a hobby for some people, so I joined in. After about 10 rounds of registering/de-registering/re-registering it has upgraded my Home Hun software, but nothing else. I have never found a hot spot to see if I can connect!!

Security?

So if I go around looking for FON Hotspots and (eventually) manage to find one, I can download all the illegal movies/music/games/porn/etc I want and it'll be the FON Router's owner who the police come looking for?

How do I share 24meg bandwidth ??

I have a 24 meg connection that I dont use much of at any one time as I dont use for downloads or gaming .If someone could post how I could share SAFELY then I would be glad to do so. I use wired connection but would get a wireless card.

I did join the BT FON programme...

... and then the new software for the BT Home Hub which powers this FON business caused my router to restart itself at random. As you can imagine, I downgraded the firmware very quickly and stopped using it.

FON routers are a dirt cheap WAP tho'

I know of a certain pro wireless company (ick) who's buying them by the shedload reprogramming them (with a comedy DIY ICP programmer) with DD-WRT, Xlink Kai etc and selling them for £40 also selling them as they come for £35 when they show up on FON's site as $15.

am i the only one who looked in boredom

Hubless

If you sign up for BT Fon but don't use the Home Hub, you get all the benefits (unlimited BT Openzone and FON) but without having to turn your router into a FON access point. I think there are enough stories here about security issues with the hub to explain why other routers are a better choice. I haven't tried a FON point myself but I can confirm this works with a standard Openzone one. A drawback of Openzone/FON is that it doesn't support roaming, so you can't use The Cloud or a T Mobile hotspot. My local pub has free wireless access (and has signs up to say so), so that isn't necessarily a problem.

Risk free?

I've had BT Fon turned on ever since I got my BT Home Hub. It seems risk free as it sets up a walled garden so anyone surfing on BT Fon doesn't use my bandwidth and, more importantly, can't sneakily surf for kiddie pr0n and get me in trouble for it.

Having said that, whether it is 100% risk free for me I don't know. But in any case I very much doubt too many people have tried to use it.

Openzone

My experience of FON has so far been positive. No one has connected to my node but so far i've taken advantage of logging into openzone in Geneva (syndicated via swisscom) and Edinbrough airports.

I'm slightly confused as to the openzone comments as i've not found an openzone node i couldn't log into using my FON account.

Also, even if you do share your connection the hub assigns the FON traffic a low QoS value so your own traffic takes priority. In fact, if you attempt to connect to your own node, you can demonstrate how painfully slow it is :)

fon business

Island hoit-spot - with a pint!

"let us know if you can find an even more remote hotspot from which we can fail to file stories, send e-mail and generally pretend to be working."

St Blane's Hotel - Isle of Bute (www.stblaneshotel.com)- Might not be totally remote but our router is available to anyone who comes in for a pint or a meal (or even stay!) and covers much of the beer garden but unfortunately not the beach. BOFH & PFY rating awaited!

Unfortunately we're on 'Exchange Activate' so we're not looking at much more than 512 and BT say it would be too expensive to upgrade the exchange even to let other villagers have broadband (there's been letters to the MSP's to try and get them to change their minds).

@Angus

BMI...

I thought that it had already been shown that if someone is using your router, it doesn't matter if they connected from a different PC, the music industry will track you by ip exposed from torrenting, so surely you CAN get done for giving others access..bit of social engineering to get an account details, and it's all set up.

I Looked

Watchout!

I have a few around my area and nearly all are residential. I don't know about you but I find that next to useless as most are houses in streets. Good luck sitting outside someone's house in you car surfing the net. That is until my bluetit hat comes along and asks your to accompany him to the local nesting box.

Pirate icon because ARRR me hearties! You all be crims 'n' terrists of teh open wifi networks.

Maps and Usage

I have been registered for BT FON for sometime. I live in an apartment block with its own post code, and which is surrounded by similar blocks. There is a problem in the locating of the HotSpot on the map, with it being shown to be about 100 meters further to the south than the building. I assume that this inaccuracy is introduced through inaccurate mapping data held by Google.

Surprisingly I get a lot of visitors to the BT FON HotSpot - most of them iPhone users, at least two a week, usually at the weekends. There also seems to be a regular stream of new iPhones, so I am wondering if one of my neighbours is running a small retail business or something.